Sign In

CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE

Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Counselor

/

In Home Supportive Care Agency

/

Case Management Agency

/

In Home Supportive Care Agency

/

Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Counselor

Phone, Open Hours, Reviews & Information

CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE

(512) 385-4799

1006 E Yager Ln a 104, Austin, TX 78753, USA

 

Pharmacy Blue Star Customer Rating Customer Ratings

Reviews about CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE

No reviews. Be first - Add your review about CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE

Log in or sign up to post new review

CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE has primary practice address at 1006 E Yager Ln a 104, Austin, TX 78753, USA. CHANGING HOW I LIVE LIFE works hard to the highest-quality services described below.

To make an appointment or if you have any questions please call at (512) 385-4799 for any inquiries or visit us to experience firsthand the quality services that have made us a staple in the Austin community since they started to work on Mar 04 2010.

Healthcare Provider works as Case Management Agency and Developmentally Disabled Services Day Training Agency and Addiction (Substance Use Disorder) Counselor, with a primary focus on In Home Supportive Care Agency services. The license number is registered in State, which confirms the professionalism and compliance with healthcare standards. Source: NPPES NPI Registry

According to the official NPPES profile of the HealthCare Provider, the HealthCare Provider updated information on Sep 14 2016 last time, our records are a testament to our ongoing commitment to maintaining current and useful information for our customers. Pharmacy Near Me Team also tried to manually add and verify doctor appointment hours and other information with additional updates from Healthcare Insurance Companies Data. The data for this page is updated on weekly basis. Our data is cross-referenced with multiple healthcare databases(NPPES, FDA, Census, NUCC, States Divisions of Medical Quality Assurance’s Profiles Data, Health Insurance companies) to ensure the highest level of accuracy. Also, the page is reviewed quarterly by our Team to ensure accuracy.

These agencies are authorized to provide day habilitation services to developmentally disabled individuals who live in their homes. The function of day habilitation is to assist an individual to acquire and maintain those life skills that enable the individual to cope more effectively with the demands of independent living. Also to raise the level of the individual's physical, mental, social, and vocational functioning.

An In Home Supportive Care Agency provides services in the patient's home with the goal of enabling the patient to remain at home. The services provided may include personal care services such as hands-on assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), e.g., eating, bathing, dressing, and bladder and bowel requirements; homemaker services and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), e.g., taking medications, shopping for groceries, laundry, housekeeping, and companionship; and/or supervision or cuing so that a person can perform tasks themselves.

An organization that is responsible for providing case management services. The agency provides services which assist an individual in gaining access to needed medical, social, educational, and/or other services. Case management services may be used to locate, coordinate, and monitor necessary appropriate services. It may be used to encourage the use of cost-effective medical care by referrals to appropriate providers and to discourage over utilization of costly services. Case management may also serve to provide necessary coordination of non-medical services such as vocational rehabilitation, education, employment, when the services provided enable the individual to function at the highest level.

An In Home Supportive Care Agency provides services in the patient's home with the goal of enabling the patient to remain at home. The services provided may include personal care services such as hands-on assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs), e.g., eating, bathing, dressing, and bladder and bowel requirements; homemaker services and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), e.g., taking medications, shopping for groceries, laundry, housekeeping, and companionship; and/or supervision or cuing so that a person can perform tasks themselves.

Source: NUCC, CMS